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Deep Jwely Jai, 1959 Director: Asit Sen Music Director: Hemanta Mukherjee Lyrics: Gauri Prasanna Mazumder Playback: Manna Dey, Lata Mangeshkar, Hemanta Mukherjee Cast: Suchitra Sen, Basanta Choudhury, Pahadi Sanyal, Tulsi Chakraborty, Anil Chatterjee, Namita Sinha, Kajari Guha, Chandrabati Devi, Dilip Choudhury, Shyam Laha English translation included. Because the subs came from a different and shorter version, there are untranslated lines of dialog here and there. Nothing serious. There was heavy static between about the 2 to 4 minute marks. I removed what I could, making the dialog sound a bit hollow in the process. The audio is reasonably good the rest of the way. The Encyclopedia of Indian Cinema says this about Deep Jweley Jai: Original version of Sen’s Rajesh Khanna psychodrama Khamoshi (1969) and one of Suchitra Sen’s best-known performances. She plays Radha, the hospital nurse employed by a progressive psychiatrist (Sanyal). She is expected to develop a personal relationship with the male patients as part of their therapy. The doctor diagnoses Tapash’s (B. Choudhury) problem as an unresolved Oedipal dilemma - the inevitable consequence, he says, for men who are denied a nurturing woman. He orders the nurse to play that role, even though on an earlier, similar occasion she fell in love with the patient. Radha bears up to Tapash’s violence, wears red-bordered silk saris to impersonate his mother, sings his poetic compositions and, in the process, falls in love yet again. In the end, having brought about Tapash’s mental cure, Radha has a nervous breakdown. Suchitra Sen’s hauntingly beautiful, often partly lit close-ups set the tone for the film’s visual style. Hemanta Mukherjee’s music, e.g. Ei raat tomar amar, used a whistling chorus as a sort of leitmotif and contributed greatly to the movie’s success. Link to a playlist of the 4 songs: • Deep Jweley Jai - Bengali - All Songs COPYRIGHT INFORMATION: The Indian copyright law: http://copyright.gov.in/Documents/Cop... INDIAN COPYRIGHT ACT, 1957 CHAPTER I Preliminary (f) "cinematograph film" means any work of visual recording on any medium produced through a process from which a moving image may be produced by any means and includes a sound recording accompanying such visual recording and cinematograph shall be construed as including any work produced by any process analogous to cinematography including video films.” "CHAPTER V Term of Copyright 26.Term of copyright in cinematograph films. In the case of a cinematograph film, copyright shall subsist until sixty years from the beginning of the calendar year next following the year in which the film is published." My words: Indian film copyright (including video, dialog, music, lyrics, songs) lasts for sixty years and any film and its songs released more than sixty years ago is in the public domain. No extensions, no renewals, no exceptions. This film is no longer protected by copyright.